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    The explanatory properties of things can be directly perc... — Carmelics
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    Home/Perception
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    Supports→Knowledge of unobservable causes is not necessary for a satisfactory scientific explanation

    The explanatory properties of things can be directly perceived

    CausationPerception
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    PerceptionCausation

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    Truth & Knowledge1 linkedSkepticism

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    Aristotelian science invokes causes that are not occult or hidden but open to vi...Knowledge of unobservable causes is not necessary for a satisfactory scientific ...Scientific explanations are demonstrative arguments referring to active powers w...

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    Aristotle holds that the explanatory properties of things are open to ...83%Secondary qualities do not directly reveal properties of the occasioni...82%Ordinary perception typically requires the perceived thing to be an ob...81%When a human being perceives a material thing, what is directly seen i...80%

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    SEP: empiricism-ancient-medieval
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    Note, too, that the category of explanatory empiricism suggests a particular view of scientific explanation. It suggests that the causal factors to which an explanation appeals will be hidden aspect of the natural world, facts which lie “beneath,” as it were, the observable reality of things. An explanatory empiricist denies we can know such facts. Aristotle is cautious regarding our ability to know about matters that cannot be directly observed. As he writes, when it comes to “matters inaccessi

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